The Wisdom of the Hive by Dr. Thomas Seeley would be a good start. he did a lot of research on how bees are recruited and unrecruited with checks and balances during the wax and wane of various needs of the hive. Bees are recruited by other bees doing the work to do what work needs to be done. The bees who are receiving the "goods" also feed into the "demand" by refusing to unload bees who don't have what they really need at the moment. It's an expensive book but well worth it.

Get the bee movie that recently came out with J Sienfeld. You can easily see that some bees hang out in coffee shops, some attend the latest court cases, and some girl bees drool over pollen jocks all day long.... :-D

Ok, just kidding of course.

How about starting with the life cycle poster sold at most bee supply places. It depicts the different jobs the bees go through within it's lifetime.

On a daily basis, when field bees are not foraging, etc., they are regulating hive temperature, resting, etc. Some bees are always tending the queen and others always feeding brood. But the daily work load is dependant on the age of the bee and the role it fills that particular day.

You can see alot from an observation hive. And when the sun goes down, many bees are really doing little and go off and seem to rest. The brood area remains active, but this is for a smaller number of bees.

well, this seems very far-fetched but I am a Master of Architecture student.... and this research is for a project I am doing that is looking into swarm theory.

I am very interested in how a bee hive function through the actions of a single participants but are a part of a collective.

The research would hopefully provide a framework for my proposal which is almost like a machinezed bee hive of small independant robotsanyways,

there still doesnt seem to be a diagram I can find on the net. I have seen the life cycle diagrams but that is not really looking for. I really want to know what each type of bee does during a day and how they know what to do. I am sure I can find it in a length document or book....but it would of been nice to have a concise Diagram/cartoon of what they do